4 Steps to Getting Rid of Car Payments Forever

4 Steps to Getting Rid of Car Payments Forever

“Car sickness is the feeling you get when the monthly payment is due” – Unknown

Have you ever gotten that sick feeling when the car payment is due? You know you don’t have a choice when it comes to making that payment because you need
transportation to get to work and haul the kids around.

But you knew if you had a paid for car that the family finances would be much easier to deal with. What if something bad happened like getting laid off or
a sickness that would keep you out of work for several months, would you end up losing your car because you couldn’t make the payments? Unfortunately, many
people would.

So how can you eliminate that sick feeling and drive paid for cars for the rest of your life? Well, there is a very simple concept that will allow you to
do that if you’re willing to have a little discipline and stick with a plan.

1. First, keep doing what you’ve always done and keep paying that car payment until it’s paid off. If you have any extra to save toward your next car then
put it away and don’t touch it.

2. Next, resist with every fiber of your being the illness called “car fever” that we all get when we get a car paid off. Like the flu virus, it is a
natural phenomenon but it can be very detrimental to your financial health.

You see, when you finally get a car paid off, that car loses a bit of its luster. You’re tired of driving the same old car and now you have a little money
freed up because you don’t have a payment anymore, so in your infinite wisdom you decide you need a new car, better yet, you DESERVE a new car. So let’s go
out and get another car payment.

Give me a break! Resist car fever at all costs!

3. Keep that old car that’s still running fine and drive it until the wheels fall off. Put that car payment in a bank account every month instead. No, you
don’t treat it like found money and buy a bunch of cool stuff because you have an extra few hundred dollars a month.

CONSISTENTLY put that money in a bank account and leave it there.

4. You drive the wheels off that old car, and when you have enough saved up you can buy the car of your choice with the money you’ve been saving.

Once you do this you continue putting a payment in the bank every month so you’ll be ready when the time comes for the next car, and so on until you die or
your kids take away the keys.

This is a great way to begin taking control of how you spend your money when it comes to the transportation that most of us depend on. It’s really not that
difficult to do, especially when you finally decide you’ve had enough of sending your money to someone else and you change your mindset for good.

Just think, if you were to lose your job or experience some other financial crisis, think about how great it would be to have a paid for car. When a crisis
does happen, all you have to do is not pay into your car account for awhile until the financial situation picks up again (disaster averted!).

Another benefit is that owning a car actually becomes cheaper because you are no longer paying the interest on a car payment. So now, instead of paying
almost $30,000 for a $20,000 car over five or six years, you actually pay $20,000 and that’s it.

Since you have cash you may even be able to negotiate a discount, depending on who you’re dealing with. People get itchy to sell when they see a pile of
green in front of them.

So when you feel yourself getting “carsick” once again, think about this simple process, change your mindset, and get rid of your car payments FOREVER!

ACTION STEP: Change your mindset about car payments and make a commitment to pay cash for your next car.

"Dr. Jason Cabler is a Christian personal finance blogger, author, and speaker. He teaches how to get out of debt and live a debt free lifestyle
through his Celebrating Financial Freedom
blog and self study course. His new book "How to Budget- The Quick and Easy Guide to Making a Budget That Works" is now available (more info here). He can be reached for interviews or speaking engagements by email, and can be found on Twitter, Facebook, and Google +."

Dollar Stretcher, Inc. does not assume responsibility for advice given. All advice should be weighed against your own abilities and circumstances and applied accordingly. It is up to the reader to determine if advice is safe and suitable for his or her own situation.